Category Archives: General

New Faculty Orientation & Information Fair

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Faculty Orientation Agenda 2013

The faculty and staff of University Libraries participated in this year’s 2013 New Faculty Orientation on Friday, August 16.  Jack Montgomery, John Gottfried, and Jennifer Wilson answered questions at the lunch time Information Fair.

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(From Left to Right) John Gottfried, Jennifer Wilson, and Jack Montgomery at the Information Fair.

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John Gottfried and Jack Montgomery answering questions from new faculty members.

 

 

 

 

 

 

The afternoon presentation included a welcome from Dean Connie Foster and then presentations on reference services, LibGuides and databases from John 2013-08-28 16_07_17-New Faculty Orientation & Information Fair _ WKU Libraries BlogGottfried, catalogs and TopScholar from Deana Groves and Research Instruction from Bryan Carson.  Jack Montgomery explained collection development and our desire to partner with teaching faculty.  He also introduced our new Patron Driven Acquisition program which will launch this fall.  A collection of selected resources will be added to our TOPCAT online catalog and become part of our permanent collection the second time they are selected by patrons.  Katie King introduced the libraries’ social media (Facebook, Twitter, Youtube, Blog and our newest Pinterest).  The latter features pages on 2013-08-29 11_01_42-Greenshot capture formprograms and recent library acquisitions.  Brian Coutts talked about this year’s Literary Outreach programs including the Faraway Places and Kentucky Live series, the Kentucky Writer’s Conference, the Southern Kentucky Bookfest, One Book One Community reads program and Faraway Flix, a new series of foreign film nights.  He also discussed STACKMAP our new newest technical application which allows patrons to click on MAPIT in the public catalog to determine exact locations of circulating materials. Timothy Mullin talked about Library Specials Collections.  The New faculty received a copy of the libraries’ Centennial History.

 

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Link to the New Faculty Orientation Powerpoint:

New Faculty Orientation PowerPoint

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Filed under Acquisitions, Events, Far Away Places, General, Kentucky Live, Latest News, New Stuff, Past Events, Reference, Stuff, Uncategorized

Charles Smith recently returned from a conference in Bournemouth, England, where he was an invited speaker at the ‘Unremitting Passion for the Beauty and Mystery of the Natural World—Alfred Russel Wallace Centenary’ event held on 7 June at the University of Bournemouth.  The sponsoring organizations were the Linnean Society of London, the Society for the History of Natural History, and the University of Bournemouth.  Dr. Smith spoke on the subject ‘Wallace on Natural Selection: What Did He Really Have in Mind?’  The following day he and other attendees were bused out to the site of Wallace’s grave, and were entertained by a nature walk nearby.

Dr. Smith speaking at the conference

Dr. Smith speaking at the conference

Dinner at Bournemouth

Dinner after the conference for invited speakers.

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Wallace’s gravesite, with marker consisting of a petrified tree trunk.

 

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Filed under General, Latest News, New Stuff, Stuff, Uncategorized

Renovations are underway at Cravens Library

cravens_construction_insets_finConstruction workers are making great improvements to the rooftop area of Cravens Library. Work began May 13 to fix the wall around the roof and the roof. To ensure a safe environment, the exterior of the building has been fenced off to patrons; however, the building is open and accessible through the ground and 4th floor entrances as well as the Helm Java City entrance. All entrances are expected to be open at the beginning of the Fall semester in August.

According to Daniel Peach, Library Facilities Coordinator, the renovation was definitely needed. “The roof has been in disrepair for some time now, most recently leading to massive leaking on the 7th, 8th, and 9th floors of Cravens,” said Peach.

The roof repairs are scheduled to continue through October 11, but will not limit access to the building in any way.

Photo Album

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Filed under Events, General, Latest News, New Stuff

WKU Libraries: A Century of Excellence

Millennial Mural for WKU Libraries  "A Century of Excellence"

Millennial Mural for WKU Libraries
“A Century of Excellence”

Over the course of its first 100 years, WKU Libraries was served by five visionary leaders each of whom in their own unique way contributed to the growth and expansion of library services and collections.

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Filed under General, Past Events, Uncategorized

“Kentucky County Stars: Illustrious Kentuckians”

WKU Visual Resources Librarian Nancy Richey

   WKU Visual Resources Librarian Nancy Richey and retired newspaper publisher Roger Givens presented “Kentucky County Stars: Illustrious Kentuckians” as part of the “We’ve Been Everywhere” program on Tuesday, April 23 in the Helm Library on WKU’s campus.  Rogers and Givens presented images and brief synopses of famous entertainers, politicians, and other influential figures throughout history who originated form our Bluegrass state.

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Filed under Events, Flickr Photos, General, Past Events, Uncategorized, We've Been Everywhere

History comes to life…

My name is Taryn Rictaryn_ricee.  I have worked in the Manuscripts & Folklife Archives unit of the Special Collections Library at WKU for the past year as the manuscripts technician.  Previously, I served in the same unit as an intern for one semester and a student assistant for 3 years.  During my time here, I have developed a deeper appreciation for the study of historic documents.  One fundamental concept I have learned is the importance of primary source preservation to the study of history.

Primary sources are first-hand accounts about anything in history (from local family news to world wars) written during the time the events occurred. In 1863, a note from a Civil War soldier to his wife would just be a letter.  But to us in 2013, that letter is now a primary source that we can use to understand the Civil War on a more personal level.  Thanks to concerned and resourceful family members, we have letters like this in our collection that allow researchers to interpret the climate of the war.  What did this man see and experience?  How did Union soldiers view Confederates?  What was camp life like for a soldier traveling throughout the South with his regiment?  Even from reading a short, two-page letter, we can grasp a bit of perspective from an everyday man living through a destructive time in our nation’s history.

Last fall, I began teaching Kentucky History at a community college.  My initial nervousness began to wear off once I realized that I had access to the absolute best resource for this subject:  the Special Collections Library!  This job has prepared me in a very unique way to teach this subject.  In addition to incorporating research from current scholarly sources, I am able to bring the lives of Kentucky soldiers, mothers, couples, and politicians (to name a few) to a new generation of readers through their letters, certificates, and diaries.

In 2013, it’s hard to think of our emails, text messages, and twitter posts as significant historical documents.  But as insignificant as those “documents” may be to us now, we should consider what and how we should leave behind our own histories and life stories.  If you are interested in researching the Civil War or reading letters to and from Kentuckians over the past 200 years, make plans to visit the Special Collections Library.  If you would like your family’s papers to be preserved for future generations, please contact the Special Collections Library.trhhc

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Cookbook Authors at the 15th Southern Kentucky Bookfest, April 20, 2013

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KY and Southern cookbook authors at the 2013 Southern Kentucky Bookfest. (From left to right) Paul & Angela Knipple, Maggie Green, and Bobbie Smith Bryant.

The 9:00 a.m. session at this year’s Southern Kentucky Bookfest featured Kentucky and Southern cookbook authors.

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Author Bobbie Smith Bryant displaying a family heirloom, a handmade quilt.

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Filed under Events, General, Latest News, New Stuff, Uncategorized

Dr. Charles Smith lectures in Mexico City

Charles Smith has just returned from a three-day conference in Mexico City at which he gave an invited lecture on the naturalist Alfred Russel Wallace.  The host institution was UNAM, the most prominent Mexican university.  Smith will also be speaking at three other international conferences later this year, one in New York, and two in England.

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Main Library at UNAM

 

 

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Material from Manuscripts & Folklife Archives Used in Publication

Song from Betsy Smith's Shaker hymnal (MSS 143, Box 1, Folder 3)

Song from Betsy Smith’s Shaker hymnal (MSS 143, Box 1, Folder 3)

Recently Carol Medlicott, professor of cultural and historical geography at Northern Kentucky University, published an article about music in the western Shaker communities titled “Let’s mingle our feelings”: Gender and Collectivity in the Music of the Shaker West” in Common-Place, vol. 13, no. 3 (Winter 2013).  In the article she features photographs of manuscript music from several Shaker hymnals housed in the Manuscripts & Folklife Archives unit of the Special Collections Library.  Her article is partially the result of research performed at the Special Collections Library as a Research Fellow several years ago.  Medlicott’s journal article is available online by clicking here.

 Over the past eight decades, the Special Collections Library has become one of the premier research libraries for researching the Shakers or the United Society of Believers in Christ’s Second Appearing.  One reason for this niche collecting area is the library’s proximity to the Shaker village at South Union and the location of another Shaker village in the Commonwealth at Pleasant Hill.  Many printed and manuscript items about Shakers, and particularly South Union, are found in the Special Collections Library.  Examples of Shaker furniture, textiles, and other artifacts are housed in the Kentucky Museum.  Another reason for this outstanding collection was the tireless efforts of former Kentucky Libray & Museum director and Shaker expert, Mary Julia Neal, to add relevant Shaker and other utopian studies materials to the library.  To see the finding aid of Miss Neal’s own manuscript collection, click here.

To locate finding aids for other Shaker research collections in Manuscripts & Folklife Archives search TopSCHOLAR and KenCat.

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Flirting With Disaster

Fannie the FlirtThe British diarist Charles Lamb noted that on Valentine’s Day 1830 “the weary two-penny postman sinks beneath a load of delicate embarrassments not his own.”  The valentine card has steadfastly remained a cherished method of communicating one’s amorous affections for others.  The Greeting Card Association estimates that approximately one billion valentine cards will be sent this year, the second largest card-sending holiday of the year behind Christmas.

On of the most cherished valentines in the Manuscripts and Folklife Archives section of the WKU Special Collections Library was sent from an unidentified suitor to Fannie Morton Bryan (1870-1965), an avowed flirt of Russeville, Kentucky.  She often noted her flirting exploits in her diary.  After receiving a lovely pair of sugar tongs from a Mr. Bradshaw in 1889, she wrote:  “I am almost tempted to flirt with him.  O Fan! Fan!  Why can’t you behave yourself.  Why do you want to make the boys suffer so?  I try to help it but it seems second nature with me to make others suffer.  I almost feel as though that was my mission on earth.”

The valentine pictured here was sent to Fannie in 1902, when she was well past the acceptable age for marriage.  An image of a man dangling from a fishing pole line can be seen on the valentine’s right margin, and above it the sender wrote:  “One of the victims.”  The valentine proved apocryphal when it predicted “For flirts, whene’er their beauty fades, Recruit the army of Old Maids!”  Despite Fannie’s prowress as a flirt in her younger days, she died an old maid.  She taught school in Logan County until 1940 and passed away in 1965.  To see a finding aid to the Fannie Morton Bryan Collection click here.

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